News Katharina Riebel

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Katharina Riebel - Beauty is in the ear of the beholder ...www.exeter.ac.uk › ... › Details

www.exeter.ac.uk
Katharina Riebel from Leiden University in the Netherlands, will be giving a seminar titled 'Beauty is in the ear of the beholder: development of ...

“Stimmen sehen” • Stabsstelle Presse und Kommunikation ...

www.fu-berlin.de
Die Biologinnen Prof. Constance Scharff, Ph.D. von der Freien Universität, Prof. Dr. Katharina Riebel von der Leiden University und Prof. Dr. Wouter Halfwerk von der Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam haben für ihr Forschungsvorhaben „Stimmen sehen: Die Rolle multimodaler Signale beim Erlernen von Lauten“ gemeinsam ein Forschungsstipendium des ...

Female bird songs have been underappreciated, study finds • Earth.com

www.earth.com
Researchers are calling for more widespread documentation of the female birdsong, arguing that a better understanding of these vocalizations could lead to a...

Inferior males get lucky with the birds | New Scientist

www.newscientist.com
Some female zebra finches actively choose males that are weaker, weedier and poorer singers

Lady Lyrebirds Have a Voice, Too | Audubon

www.audubon.org
They were always singing. We were just distracted by the males.

Bird song – it's not just a male gig

phys.org
Karan J. Odom," Michelle L. Hall, Katharina Riebel, Kevin E. Omland, Naomi E. Langmore. Nature Communications 5, Article number:

Female Birdsong Is Finally Getting the Attention It Deserves ...www.audubon.org › news › female-birdsong-finally-ge...

www.audubon.org
“The textbook story is: Male birds sing,” says Katharina Riebel, a professor of biology at Leiden University in the Netherlands, who's been ...

UNC Scientist: Female Birds Sing, Too; Help Her Record More Instances

www.unco.edu
When North American ornithologists hear a bird singing, they’re likely to assume it’s a male. But in many species, the females sing too — and a new commentary...

Prominence of Female Birdsong Challenges Evolutionary Theory :...

www.natureworldnews.com
Male birds attract females with their lavish plumage and crooning birdsongs, but a new study suggests the birds are not singing to a mute audience. Seventy-one...
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